and that romney's inevitable. but the fact is, romney's probably the weakest republican frontrunner since leonard wood in 1920 and he lost on the 10th ballot. romney has a challenge. he wins a state, for example, he wins ojaio. he gets 38% of the vote. places where nobody else can compete because of money, guam, for example, he does fine. but overall, you go to wyoming, 40%. he loses kansas outright. the most he is going to get in mississippi and alabama is probably a third and more likely to get 25 or 28%. so... yes, he's the frontrunner. he's not a very frong strong frontrunner, i think we are as likely to see after the last primary in june, we are as likely to see a 60-day conversation about what is going to happen as we are to see romney dominating n. that context, i think the vote that i got, remembering that i was in first place, both in december and again in mid-january in terms of the gallup poll. i think there is a space for a visionary conservative with big solutions like a national american energy polic